Mountain Lake Press

"Here's my four-sentence review of Dr. Tawfik Hamid's new bookInside Jihad: How Radical Islam Works; Why It Should Terrify Us; How to Defeat It. Buy this book. Read this book. Refer to this book. Share this book.

"I've read and reviewed counter-jihad classics by bestselling experts including Robert Spencer, Ayaan Hirsi Ali, Bernard Lewis, Andrew Bostom, Wafa Sultan, Brigitte Gabriel, Mosab Hassan Yousef, and Phyllis Chesler. I think highly of each. This is how good Inside Jihad is. If someone said to me, "I want to read just one book about jihad." I'd give that reader Dr. Hamid's book.

"Inside Jihad is brief. Hamid's style is direct and fast-paced. He says what he needs to say without sensationalism, emotionality, literary ambition, or apologies. He pulls no punches.

"Tawfik Hamid was born and raised in Egypt, the most populous Middle Eastern country. He was raised Muslim. Hamid's mother was a teacher; his father, a surgeon and a private atheist who taught him to respect Christians and Jews. The family observed the Ramadan fast but had little other religious observance. Arabic is his first language and he has studied the Koran in the original Arabic. From 1979-82, he was a member of Jamaa Islamiya, a terrorist group. He met Ayman al-Zawahiri, the current leader of al-Qaeda.

"Hamid grew up under Gamal Abdel Nasser's pan-Arab socialism. Nasser wanted to modernize Egypt. He suppressed the Muslim Brotherhood, executed one of its leaders, Sayyid Qutb, and curtailed travel to and from Saudi Arabia, fearing Wahhabi influence.

"The 1973 Oil Embargo sparked a revival of Islam. Muslims concluded that Allah rewarded Saudi Arabia for the Saudis' strict religious observance. Allah's reward was the Saudi ability to humble the United States.

"Islamization in Egypt 'started mildly enough.' Hamid warns the reader to pay careful attention to slow Islamization. He says that the same methods that were used in Egypt are now being used in the West. 'The more we surrender,' he warns, 'the more Islamists will demand.'

"The camel's nose under the tent was something few could object to: individual prayer. Previously, if an employee interrupted his workday to perform one of Islam's mandated five daily prayers, it was perceived as bizarre. Now it was admirable.

"Another straw in the wind: the hijab. In school photos taken before the 1970s, many Egyptian girls are without hijab. After America's humbling in the oil shock, more and more girls began to wear hijab. Men stopped wearing gold wedding bands; gold was deemed 'un-Islamic' for men. More toxic Islamizations, including Jew-hatred, followed. Imams preached that Jews are monkeys and pigs and that they poisoned Mohammed.

"Islamization on campus also began in an innocuous way: Islamists used the moments before class began to talk about Islam. One day, the Christian professor of one class said that it was time for discussion of Islam to stop and the academic hour to begin. The Islamists called the professor an infidel and broke his arm. 'The Christian students were terrified,' Hamid reports.

"'I remember the first time I looked at a Christian with disdain,' Hamid reminisces. He was reading a required textbook. The book told him that Mohammed said, 'I have been instructed by Allah to declare war and fight all mankind until they say "No God except Allah and Mohammed is the prophet of Allah.''' Hamid, who had previously had Christian friends, turned to a Christian student and said, 'If we applied Islam correctly, we should be doing this to you.'

"Jamaa Islamiya actively recruited medical students like Hamid. It took six months for Hamid to become 'sufficiently indoctrinated.'

"Hamid details several lures that recruiters used to bring young people into their movement:

fear of hell,

a demonization of critical thinking,

a sense of superiority over non-Muslims,

suppression of any emotional life outside of Islamism,

suppression of sexual expression,

a promise of sex for jihadis,

and upholding of Mohammed as the perfect example, beyond criticism.

"Author Don Richardson estimates that one in eight verses in the Koran mentions Hell. By contrast, the Old Testament mentions Hell once in every 774 verses, and it is never described as graphically as it is described in the Koran. Hamid quotes Islamists using many Koranic passages that vividly describe Hell to terrorize potential members: 'garments of fire shall be cut out for them … burning water will be poured over their heads causing all that is within their bodies as well as the skins to melt away … they shall be held by iron grips; and every time they try in their anguish to come out of it, they shall be returned and told "Taste suffering through fire to the full!'" Infidels in Hell will eat thorns and drink scalding water as if they were 'female camels raging with thirst and disease.' Their intestines will be cut to pieces.

"Another method used to Islamize recruits was al-fikr kufr – one becomes an infidel by thinking critically.

"Recruiters flattered recruits, telling them that they were superior to non-Muslims. 'Take not Jews and Christians for friends,' they quoted from Koran 5:51. 'Jews are monkeys and pigs': Koran 5:60. 'Those who worship Jesus are infidels': Koran 5:17. 'Do not offer the greeting "As-salamu alaykum," or "peace be with you," to Christians or Jews; whenever you meet Christians or Jews in a road, force them to its narrowest alley': Sahih Muslim. Muslims who did not carry out jihad were also inferior.

"Terror recruits' emotional outlets were cut off. They were forbidden from creating or consuming music, dance, or visual art. They were discouraged from having sex, but lured with promises of great sex in paradise. The houris – dark-eyed virgins – are graphically described in Muslim literature as very soft, without complaint, and easily satisfied. Houris regain their virginity immediately after sex. Men are promised organs that never go limp. Mohammed, recruits were assured, could have sex with eleven women in an hour.

"Finally, the example of Mohammed himself was not to be questioned. Mohammed married a six-year-old. He raped war captives, in one case immediately after decapitating the captive's brother and father and after she had witnessed her mother being carried off also to be raped. Mohammed approved of the dismemberment of Um Kerfa, a poetess who criticized him. Mohammed is the 'perfect example, worthy of emulation.' Muslims today must unquestioningly approve these behaviors.

"Hamid's fellow extremists were aware that Muslim countries were no longer in the cultural forefront. Islam had spread as far as Spain and India in only the first century after Mohammed's death. Terror recruits believed that early Islam's success was caused by strict adherence to Islamic doctrine. They believed that their strict observance could bring back Islam's early dominance.

"Some wonder how women could be recruited into a movement that keeps them in an inferior position in relation to men. Hamid clarifies: Muslimahs were told that they would be superior – to infidel women.

"Hamid expounds uncompromisingly on the power and importance of the hijab. He insists that when prominent Westerners such as Nancy Pelosi and Laura Bush travel to Muslim countries and wear the hijab, they are making a grave error. The hijab is not 'a neutral, or merely traditional, fashion statement.' The hijab's purpose 'is not modesty or to encourage observers to focus on a Muslim woman's personality.' The hijab exists to proclaim 'deep Islamic doctrinal connections to slavery and discrimination. Western women who cover themselves are unwittingly endorsing an inhumane system.' The hijab's purpose, Hamid argues persuasively, is to create a society where superior free Muslimahs are visually distinct from inferior infidel slave women.

"Islamists 'despise women who did not wear the hijab. We considered them vain … we believed they would burn in Hell.' Further, 'the hijab serves to differentiate between slave girls and women who are considered free … it creates a feeling of superiority among the women who wear it.' The Koran promises that women who wear hijab will not be 'molested.' Women without hijab are slaves and can be raped without guilt.

"Australia's foremost Muslim cleric restated this Islamist position in 2006. In Sydney, fourteen Muslim men gang-raped non-Muslim women. Sheikh Taj el-Din al-Hilali said that it was the victims' fault. 'If you take out uncovered meat' and cats eat it, the cats are not to blame. Women possess igraa, 'the weapon of enticement.'

"Hamid emphasizes that the hijab is both vanguard and emblem of Islamic supremacy. During their 1953 meeting, the first thing Sayyid Qutb asked Nasser to do was to force women to wear the hijab. A YouTube video documents this conversation. In the video, Nasser is speaking to a large assembly. When he repeats Qutb's demand, the crowd laughs. One wag shouts out, 'Let him wear it!' Nasser points out that Qutb's own daughter does not wear the hijab. The crowd laughs even more, and bursts into applause. This video is at least fifty years old. It is a reminder that fifty years ago, countries like Egypt and Iran were modernizing. Women, in cities at least, could be seen in public in miniskirts and without the hijab.

"Hamid reports that the Muslim Brotherhood does not announce its end goal openly. 'They pose as peacemakers … The Muslim Brotherhood will accept circumstances that offend their beliefs – temporarily – if doing so will advance their goals.' They will – temporarily – permit western dress for women and alcohol consumption. This is all part of taqiyya (deceiving the infidel). The Muslim Brotherhood has a four stage plan: at first, merely preach. Then, move on to participation in public life. Next, consolidate power 'while faking legitimacy.' Finally, enforce Sharia.

"A few turning points turned Hamid away from Islamism, for example, when a fellow terror recruit described his plot to bury alive an Egyptian police officer.

"Hamid had been studying the Bible so that he could better debate Christians. Jesus' words haunted him. 'What shall it profit a man, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul?' He asked himself, what profit to Islam if it subjugated the entire world but lost its soul? 'Exposure to the Bible was crucial in helping me question the violent aspects of Salafist teaching.'

"His medical studies also gave him pause. 'I wondered if the divine DNA molecule was violent. Did it attempt to conquer the rest of the cell? Did it try to force other cellular components to behave like itself? It did not. Rather, it worked harmoniously within an organism to create and sustain life.'

"The clincher for Hamid was 'the existence of alternative forms of Islamic teaching.' Hamid met Muslims called 'Quranics,' who reject the hadiths. The Quranics 'stood against killing apostates, against stoning women for adultery, against killing gays. They viewed the Islamic Conquests as immoral and senseless.' The Quranics 'allowed me to think critically. If this alternative sect had not been available, it would have been much more difficult for me to resist jihadism.'

"After recounting his own history, Hamid turns his attention to the international scene. Hamid makes mincemeat of a slew of Islam-apologetic arguments. He insists that it is utterly wrong-headed to blame Islamism on poverty, global warming, lack of education, discrimination, Islamophobia, dictatorial regimes, colonialism, imperialism, or the treatment of Palestinians by Israel. President Obama's statement that ISIS is 'not Islamic,' was the 'most ill-informed utterance of all.'

"Hamid stresses that one must attend to what Muslims say to each other, in Arabic, about their faith, not just what propagandists in the West say in English to a media that never seems to hit Muslims with any hard questions. Hamid cites the example of prominent Saudi Sheikh Sale al-Fawzan. Al-Fawzan says that 'slavery is part of Islam' and 'slavery is part of jihad, and jihad will remain as long as there is Islam.' Anyone who tries to extract slavery and jihad from Islam is an 'infidel.' Familiarity with such pronouncements would have prepared the world for ISIS's practices.

"Dr. Hamid's righteous indignation – and his courage – reach heroic heights when he castigates his fellow Muslims, not just for being passive in the face of terror, but for secretly applauding it. 'A large percentage of Muslims today passively approve of Islamic terror,' he says. 'They minimize it, shift the blame, or do nothing.' They are 'secretly proud.' Terrorism gives them 'a sense of victory and power.'

"Muslims often can't bring themselves to perceive terrorists as bad people. 'It is widely believed that a Muslim who fulfills the Five Pillars of Islam is virtuous' – whether he's a terrorist or not. 'Islamists cannot be bad Muslims because they perform the superficial rituals.'

"Hamid unpacks in detail several different taqiyya strategies Muslim apologists use to mislead Westerners into thinking that they oppose terrorism while in fact supporting it. Hamid lists seven questions that must be answered by any spokesperson for Islam. Every American politician should read these pages; voters should photocopy them and mail them to elected officials. Students should have them on hand before they head off to college.

"'Many Muslims seem to have this tendency to point fingers at anyone but themselves,' he observes. Islam fosters a 'culture of deflection' that 'makes it very difficult for Islam to correct itself.' Many insist that Muslims did not carry out the 9/11 attacks. It was the Jews! They insist. 'This denial is a form of passive terrorism.' Hamid writes perceptively that 'Redemption from shame is not and can never be the product of denial. It comes rather from honestly admitting fault and then confronting it openly.'

"I'll mention that Islam, unlike Christianity, lacks the ritual of confession. For two thousand years, Christians have been following scriptural dictates to confess their sins to others, and to atone for them. Self-examination is valued in Christian-influenced cultures – enough so that politicians caught in scandals are often advised to appear on the highest-rated talk show that will book them and to offer a mea culpa (through my fault), a phrase from Catholic confession. There is no comparable Muslim ritual.

"Hamid is equally gloves-off in his criticism of the West. He reminds the reader of how gradually and innocuously Islamization had begun in Egypt. He says weak Western military response to jihad is comparable to using too few antibiotics to treat an infection. Surviving bacteria become resistant, and more virulent. He lambastes moral relativism. He utterly rejects comparisons between jihadis and fundamentalist Christians and Jews. Hamid singles out one voice – that of pseudo-scholar Karen Armstrong – for special condemnation. He accuses Armstrong and others like of her 'paving the way for Islamic barbarity.' Armstrong is 'spectacularly representative of the multicultural revisionism and moral backsliding that are helping to cripple efforts at genuine reform of Islam.'

"His critique of Western liberals' enabling of jihadis is echoed in many memoirs by Islam-critical Muslims and former Muslims, including Ayaan Hirsi Ali. 'It is strange how Christianity is constantly assailed by Western progressives' including the American Civil Liberties Union. 'The ACLU said nothing about installing Islamic footbaths in restrooms … at a taxpayer-funded public institution in 2007.' Hamid sticks his hand in a real hornet's nest: immigration. He believes America should change its policies to weed out jihadis.

"Dr. Hamid remains a Muslim. He loves his religion, and he wants to save it. By writing this book and speaking out as he has, he is risking his life to do so. The final portion of the book offers his complete re-interpretation of Islam and the Koran, and his plan for defeating extremism.

"Muslims like Dr. Tawfik Hamid inspire my hope and admiration. In his excellent book, one sentence struck me as most poignant and worth lengthy pondering. 'I often wonder how al-Zawahiri would have turned out if his childhood religious education had promoted love instead of hate and violence.' Dr. Hamid is doing his part to re-interpret his beloved natal faith, Islam, in a peaceful and loving way. One can only wish him good fortune in that herculean effort."

--Danusha Goska, Frontpage Mag

Featured review of Hillwilla

“Melanie Forde’s hauntingly starkcover photo, along with the book’s curious title, makes a powerful first impression. In fact it was enough toinduce the Fargo willies in me. And I have to say, after reading the first short chapters, “Spit Happens,” “Bart Sighs,” and “Post-Holiday Blues,”that although Hillwilla seems a long way from Fargo, I thought it would turn out to be a melancholy book. Indeed, it might well have if not forForde’s wonderful way with words. The further I read, the more obvious it became that this author has something she’s been itching to say. And I love the way she says it.

“Spit does happen in Hillwilla, just as it happens in everyday life. Some of it washes off easily and is forgotten, but some of it stains deep in the heart. If you’re looking for something that will give you the Fargo willies, this is not the book for you. If you are looking for a love story,Hillwilla certainly has those aspects. But for me it’s Melanie Forde’s poetic delivery of life’s spit, sprinkled with the virtues of tolerance, empathy,and humor, which delighted me and gave me pause to reflect. It’s writing that connects the reader with the human spirit.”—Charlie Hackbarth, Tales of the Trail

Featured review of Global Security Consulting

"Embarking on the journey of entrepreneurship is not for the faint of heart. Author Luke Bencie shares advice for those who dare in Global Security Consulting. He offers a plethora of perspectives to help fellow security consultants establish or grow their global security consultancies or assist security professionals who are engaging a consultant.

"The book is divided into two parts: 'Establishing Your Global Security Consultancy' and 'Growing Your Business.' The first part provides advice on getting started, finances, leadership, management, marketing, and more, including 'Ten Commandments for Success.' These commandments are salient points for any consultant to live by.

"The second part covers specifics on the selling process, including the basics of the request for proposal (RFP), international business knowhow, global travel, and more. 'Now It's Time to Deliver' highlights key strategoes to not only win clients, but to demonstrate one's value to the industry.

"A reader might expect a text on this subject to provide a library of templates or examples of forms for a budding consultant to use. While the author only offers couple of items, he provides a great example of a proposal format, as well as a format for documenting a risk assessment. The lack of this documentation did not detract from the value of the book—at the end of the day, the documentation used will be driven by the needs of the specific business and its clients.

"The author correctly stresses that consultants should listen more than they speak. In order to help clients solve their problems, the consultant needs to understand their business, ask questions to clarify the issues, and then agree on an approach to solve the problem.

"The author tends to put too much emphasis on the importance of image. While some clients will be overly concerned with a professional image (office, car, clothes, accessories, etc.), one also has to balance the costs of acquiring and maintaining that image against financial health—a point the author also makes clear.

"Consultants are an invaluable resource for the global security professional and international business. Sometimes they are engaged for services in lieu of proprietary security personnel, to augment a business need, or simply to provide an objective opinion. This book can help new entrepreneurs establish a business and help security professionals define the services they seek from consultants."

Featured review of Among Enemies: Counter-Espionage for the Business Traveler

"When we examine a piece of intelligence or analysis, it is wise to determine, among other factors, both the bona fides and the access of the source, and Luke Bencie more than passes muster on both scales. The brief About the Author section at the end of the book establishes Bencie as having traveled to over 100 countries over the past 15 years on behalf of the U.S. Intelligence Community, as well as for the private defense industry, and as having become aware, sometimes painfully he says, of the extents to which both foreign governments, industrial and even free-lance operators will go to steal American business secrets.

"Among Enemies is a primer for American business travelers, designed both to inform them of the threats they may face, on the parts of unfriendly parties, to their proprietary information, and to teach them, to some degree, how to think and act like a counterintelligence officer. Bencie identifies the information sought by the adversary as both business intelligence and intellectual property, BI/IP and, while acknowledging the technical differences between them, treats them as a single unit for unfriendly collection.

"He properly dwells at some length on the significant and growing threat of cyber attacks on the various electronic devices carried by the business traveler, and what can be done to minimize or deflect these. He recommends a laptop dedicated to business travel which contains only the information germane to the current travel and is professionally scrubbed between travels. Any BI/IP necessary to be with the traveler should be on a thumb drive and neither device should ever be outside the control of the traveler. Tablets and cell phones are equally vulnerable and should be protected with equal care.

"Three primary threat areas facing the traveler are the plane, the taxi and the hotel. A seat companion on the plane and the loquacious cabbie could both be professional experts in elicitation and the friendly and gregarious American is all too frequently an easy target. Threats in the hotel have come a long way from the day when what we feared most was the concealed microphone in the room. The audio threat is still there, of course, and is now complemented by the video, frequently above the work area so the camera can read what is being produced on the laptop, and the cyber threat that no physical examination will detect. The author quite properly discourages physical examination of the room in any case first, because what has been professionally concealed will not be found and, more importantly, because such an examination will be noted by the adversary who may well conclude that our traveler has had counterintelligence training and may himself be an intelligence officer. Either of these could be detrimental to the business purpose of the trip and, depending on the country, could lead to host government counterintelligence interest. In either case, the business purpose of the trip will not have been met.

"It is not only host government intelligence/security services that will be interested in acquiring BI/IP. An entire industry of private collectors has arisen, frequently staffed by former government professionals, who collect information to sell to the people with whom the traveler is there to meet. They could be commissioned to do this, or they could be acting on their own initiative after having identified our traveler as a potential target of opportunity. These private collectors are aided by the free-lancers, that taxi driver who may have come up with what is effectively an operational lead in the course of an airport to hotel ride, and receives a one-time payment from the professional who then pursues it.

"The author correctly notes that attention to all these potential threats need not and should not result in paranoia, but rather in that professional virtue we call situational awareness. Being conscious of the threat even before departing on the travel, being aware from moment to moment while abroad of one’s immediate situation, and being willing to acknowledge that, while in the foreign country, one is effectively either always on or not far from that operational X, can lead to avoiding or minimizing unfriendly collection efforts and contribute to the success of the trip. It will not be fun, but it is not a vacation."

Featured review of Adventures in the Scream Trade: Scenes from an Operatic Life

"Retired operatic baritone Charles Longemerges from the pages of this neatly titled memoir as a person of such colorful vitality as to make me sad that I never encountered him in performance. To make a career as a performer, let it be confessed, needs a degree of self-confidence that unsympathetic observers may see as arrogance. What is interesting about Mr. Long is that this quality coexists with a rarer, and rather touching, awareness of his own weaknesses. The result is a self-portrait of more than average polychromatic richness. Long’s well-written story juxtaposes his 'scenes from operatic life,' which provide a revealing account of what might be called the engine-room of opera performance, with a no less interesting confessional of his often bumpy relationships and the health problems that led to his regrettably early retirement after some glorious years sharing the stage, on evidently equal terms, with many of the greatest singers of our time. The book is attractively produced, and offers entertaining reading for anyone interested in music–or, for that matter, in human strengths and foibles."

--Bernard Jacobson, independent music critic, Seattle, Washington

Featured review of The Craft We Chose: My Life in the CIA

"Very late inThe Craft We Chose: My Life in the CIA, author Richard L. Holm writes, 'The United States continues to defend itself against enemies who are hell-bent on destroying us. The National Clandestine Service is playing a vital part in that seemingly unending fight because electronic intelligence gathering can take us only so far. The human element is indispensable and must endure.' Those lines echoed in my head for days after I sat the book aside, and now I think I know why. For one thing, I had just read more than 500 pages recounting circumstances and events that clearly demonstrated the indispensability of one human—Holm—and what a difference he made in what we call history, or even reality.

"Holm’s memoir—his second, for the record—covers more than three decades, beginning with his joining the CIA’s Junior Officer Training program in 1960 and ending with his retirement in 1996, the same year he received the Distinguished Intelligence Medal, the agency’s highest award. Those 36 years—more than a lifetime for too many of his fellow agents— spanned the Vietnam War, Watergate and its aftermath, the Iran-Contra affair and the end of the Cold War, among many other chapters of history. During those events—indeed, while enswirled in them and later dealing with their fallout—Holm steadily rose through agency ranks, working in the Directorate of Operations—now the National Clandestine Service, the component directly responsible for collecting human intelligence—and eventually becoming one of the agency’s senior operations officers. His career included deployments to seven countries on three continents and service under 13 CIA directors.

"The book’s chapters, and the years they represent, fly by, with Holm’s first-person accounts setting the reader squarely in the midst of them. Throughout, Holm maintains focus on the art and craft of intelligence (and counterintelligence) gathering, consistently referring to it as 'tradecraft' as matter-of-factly as others might discuss shoemaking or metallurgy. He writes:

Most movies and the media in general portray agency personnel as either cloak-and-dagger types, sometimes with superhuman abilities, or ruthless bureaucrats who would rather sacrifice one of their own than give up power. The fact is we do sometimes train people extensively before we dispatch them on dangerous missions. It’s also true that once in a while a rogue wave washes its way into our sea of personnel.

But the overwhelming truth is that most of what we do parallels government work in general and much of the private sector. Some of it is downright ordinary, involving mountains of paperwork. Someone has to supervise that ordinary but important work. For a while, and for a part of it, that someone had to be me.

"Before eventually becoming a 'headquarters bureaucrat' (his phrase), Holm served the agency as a 'man on the street' (also his phrase, although given the crude conditions of some of his missions, it’s using the phrase loosely). And, as his publisher contends, Holm’s story does contain 'suspense worthy of a Hollywood blockbuster or a best-selling novel.'

"One of the most riveting (and, in retrospect, cinematic) episodes involves Holm’s survival, at age 29, of a harrowing plane crash in central Africa’s Congo that burned more than 35 percent of his body and led to the loss of his left eye. Holm survived the surreal ordeal on sheer determination ('I simply would not die in this rotten Congo, I decided') and with the angelic assistance of an unnamed Azande witch doctor and a small band of men who walked and rode bicycles 100 miles across enemy-held and cannibalinfested territory to reach help.

"Many years later, while serving as a station chief in Europe and as head of a U.S. counterterrorism group, Holm participated in the hunt for the international terrorist and assassin known as Carlos the Jackal. While caught up in the reading of such experiences, it is easy to forget that Holm and his fellow agents were doing such work—and routinely facing danger as part of it—without the benefit of technologies that were anywhere on par with the systems and devices highlighted every month in the pages of this magazine. At the time, such technologies simply didn’t exist, but even if they had, Holm’s observation about the limitations of electronic intelligence gathering would still ring true.

"Holm’s memoir is a testament to that fact, and it’s a good reminder for those in the security profession at whatever level—local, national or international. As good of a read as it is, though, The Craft We Chose is a book that almost didn’t happen.

"In the memoir’s final pages, Holm credits former CIA Director Richard Helms with convincing him to overcome reservations he had about chronicling his mostly secret career. Helms, Holm says, advised keeping in mind a larger purpose.

"'If we don’t write about the Cold War period it will be written by journalists and academics, and they will get it wrong,' Helms said, to which Holm writes, by way of reply, 'I couldn’t disagree with him. Dick Helms knew it is imperative for Americans to understand and support what the CIA does. To put it plainly, the agency needs a constituency. He believed, and I concur wholeheartedly, that the more the public appreciates what we do, the stronger their support will be.'

"Even if scholars and media types earnestly attempt the task of reporting the years Holm covers and try to get things right, they will necessarily lack the insider vantage of Holm’s lifetime on the streets and behind closed doors. His work is something worth being grateful for—both the book itself and the actual decades of service detailed in its pages."